National trends and outcomes of heart-kidney transplantation using hepatitis C positive donors

CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION(2022)

引用 4|浏览12
暂无评分
摘要
Background This study evaluated the outcomes of combined heart-kidney transplantation in the United States using hepatitis C positive (HCV+) donors. Methods Adults undergoing combined heart-kidney transplantation from 2015 to 2020 were identified in the United Network for Organ Sharing registry. Patients were stratified by donor HCV status. Kaplan-Meier curves with multivariable Cox regression models were used for risk-adjustment in a propensity-matched cohort. Results A total of 950 patients underwent heart-kidney transplantation of which 7.8% (n = 75) used HCV+ donors; 68% (n = 51) were viremic and 32% (n = 24) were non-viremic donors. Unadjusted 1-year recipient survival was similar between HCV+ versus HCV- donors (84% vs 88%, respectively; P = .33). Risk-adjusted analysis in the propensity-matched cohort showed HCV+ donor use did not confer increased risk of 1-year mortality (hazard ratio .63, 95% CI .17-2.32; P = .49). Sub-group analysis showed viremic and non-viremic HCV+ donors had similar 1-year survival as well (84% vs 84%; P = .95). Conclusions Compared with recipients of HCV- donor dual heart-kidney transplants, recipients of HCV+ organs had comparable 1-year survival and clinical outcomes after combined transplantation. Although future studies should evaluate other outcomes related to HCV+ donor use, this practice appears safe and should be expanded further in the heart-kidney transplant population.
更多
查看译文
关键词
heart transplant, hepatitis C, kidney transplant, rejection, survival
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要